Well thanks to all the advice I got on this forum I decided it was safe enough to proceed with my first loading experience.
The method suggested of using a bullet to test the neck size was very helpful to me, and I quickly found that my necks had not been sized. I now assume all the pressure is found at the bottom of the lever stroke and not an option as to where you want to adjust this in the stroke. Initially I thought mid stroke would be a good place for placing the die. Anyhow, I did what I now believe to be the proper die/press set up and believe Ive properly sized my necks as the bullets no longer drop right into the case and now can not be forced in by hand. I would like to have some way of calibrating neck size uniformly for every neck sizing. The hand dial calibrator has too much variation for my taste, but I believe with time I will learn better procedures.
In the meantime, I felt it was best to proceed and get my first load completed under my belt, so to speak.
Next I moved on to the priming step (the scariest for me since Ive never even seen this done before), and decided to learn how it feels to properly seat a primer by using spent/fired primers on 5 cases first to get the right feel for it. I was happy with the practice so I moved on to live primers but only put one primer in the case at a time and carefully inspected the seating and the pocket before each press. It went OK, I think. I wish I could calibrate and uniform every seating, but Ive read there are problems associated with that attempt as well (pocket variation). Anyhow, I think the Lee hand primer has a nice feel to it now, but what would I know.
Then I moved on to powder. I went through a feeding container of powder (IMR 4895) through the throw to coat the mechanism as instructed. I then tried to follow the instructions for calibrating the throw to 40 grains. I found the instructions clear enough but the actual device to be confusing. So I decided to forget the numbers and just adjust it until it throws the 40 grains I wanted. It didnt take very long until that happened, so I started loading my cases. I weighed every throw before loading each case and was actually surprised by how consistent every throw was. Im happy with the equipment, but I still dont have faith in the numbered calibration. Until I can figure that out, Ill just adjust till I get what I want. Thank goodness for throws though, because hand trickling every load would be very time consuming.
Lastly I seated the bullets (Sierra 168 bt). Now the seat adjuster has no number calibration, so I had to just twist a bit and measure with the hand caliper until I got the 2.8 I wanted. That went fine, seemingly. But in 40 rounds I only got about 15 that were exactly 2.8, and then ten that were a tiny bit over (o.oo2) and about ten that were a tiny bit under and about 5 very over and 5 very under (0.006). I would like to learn how to exact every seating. Perhaps it has to do with case length as well?
Regardless, I assume these results are OK enough for my first attempt and I look forward to testing the result against factory ammo at the range next week.
Thanks to everyone for the feedback and please keep it coming.
Best wishes,
Rob
:roll: